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Title: Understanding by Design


1
Understanding by Design
By Mutindi ndunda
2
Curriculum Design and Understanding The Vignettes
  • English High School Teacher
  • The Apple Theme
  • The Math questionhow many buses does the army
    need to transport 1,128 soldiers if each bus
    holds 36 soldiers?
  • The High School History teacher dilemma

What do all these vignettes have in common?
3
What is Backward Design
  • Students are our primary clients, effectiveness
    of curriculum, assessment, and instructional
    designs is ultimately determined by their
    achievement of desired learnings.
  • Standards inform and shape our work.
  • National, state, district, or institutional
    standards specify what students should know and
    be able to do.
  • These standards provide a framework to help us
    identify teaching and learning priorities and
    guide our design of curriculum and assessments.

4
Are the Best Curricular Designs Backwards?
  • The backward design has proven to be one of the
    most effective curricular designs
  • Many teachers begin with textbooks, favored
    lessons, and time-honored activities rather than
    deriving those tools from targeted goals or
    standards.
  • Backward design advocates for the reverse One
    starts with the endthe desired results (goals or
    standards)and then derives the curriculum from
    the evidence of learning (performances) called
    for by the standard and the teaching needed to
    equip students to perform.
  • Backward design may be thought of as purposeful
    task analysis.

5
  • This backward approach to curricular design also
    departs from another common practice thinking
    about assessment as something we do at the end,
    once teaching is completed.
  • Backward design calls for us to operationalize
    our goals or standards in terms of assessment
    evidence as we begin to plan a unit or course.
  • Reminds us to begin with the question and
    evidence that students have attained the desired
    understanding and proficienciesbefore proceeding
    to plan teaching and learning experiences.

6
The Backward Design Process
The logic of backward design suggests a planning
sequence for curriculum. This sequence has three
stages.
Stages in the Backward Design Process
Identify Desired Results.
Determine Acceptable Evidence.
Identify Desired Results.
7
Stage 1 Identify Desired Results
  • Question
  • What should students know, understand, and be
    able to do?
  • Examine established content standards (national,
    state, and district), and review curriculum
    expectations.
  • Make choicesPrioritize what is to be covered.
    Given that there typically is more content than
    can reasonably be addressed, we are obliged to
    make choices.
  • We cannot address all areas thus the larges ring
    identifies knowledge. (Pg. 9)

8
Establishing Curricular Priorities
9
Prioritizing contentApplying Filters.
Filter 1.
  • Ask your selfquestions such as
  • To what extent does the idea, topic or process
    represent a big idea having enduring value
    beyond the classroom?
  • Enduring understandings go beyond discrete facts
    or skills to focus on larger concepts,
    principles, or processes.
  • They are applicable to new situations within or
    beyond the subject. The idea is the rule of law.
  • A big idea also can be described as a linchpin
    idea. A linchpin is the pin that keeps the wheel
    in place on an axle. Thus, a linchpin idea is one
    that is essential for understanding.
  • A good question to ask is For any subject
    taught in primary school, we might ask is it
    worth an adults knowing, and whether having
    known it as a child makes a person a better
    adult.

10
Filter 2.
To what extent does the idea, topic, or process
reside at the heart of the discipline?
Filter 3.
To what extent does the idea, topic, or process
require uncoverage?
Filter 4.
To what extent does the idea, topic, or process
offer potential for engaging students?
11
Stage 2 Determine Acceptable Evidence
  • How will we know if students have achieved
    the desired results and met the standards?
  • What will we accept as evidence of student
    understanding and proficiency?
  • The backward design approach encourages us to
    think about a unit or course in terms of the
    collected assessment evidence needed.
  • The backward approach encourages teachers and
    curriculum planners to first think like an
    assessor before designing specific units and
    lessons, and thus to consider up front how they
    will determine whether students have attained the
    desired understandings.

12
Continuum of Assessment Methods
Informal checks for understanding
Observation/Dialogue
Performance task/project
Quiz/Test
Academic prompt
Misconception Alert
The collected evidence we seek may well include
observations and dialogues, traditional quizzes
and tests, performance tasks and projects, as
well as students self assessments gathered over
time.
13
Types of Assessment
  • Quiz and Test Items -
  • These are simple, content-focused questions
  • Academic Prompts
  • These are open-ended questions or problems that
    require the student to think critically, not just
    recall knowledge, and then to prepare a response,
    product, or performance.
  • Performance Tasks and Projects
  • As complex challenges that mirror the issues and
    problems faced by adults, they are authentic.

14
Curricular Priorities and Assessments
  • Assessment Types
  • Traditional quizzes and tests
  • paper/pencil
  • selected-response
  • constructed-response
  • Performance tasks and projects
  • open-ended
  • complex
  • authentic

15
Stage 2 Determine Acceptable Evidence
  • This task asks students to demonstrate what I
    really want them to take away from the unit.
  • I can now use quizzes to check their prerequisite
    knowledge of the food groups and food pyramid
    recommendations, and a test for their
    understanding of how a nutritionally deficient
    diet contributes to health problems.

16
Stage 3 Plan Learning Experiences and Instruction
  • Involves deciding what activities the students
    will do during the unit and what resources and
    materials well need for those activities.
  • Teacher needs to think first about what essential
    knowledge and skills the students will need to
    demonstrate the important understandings.
  • Skills needed include learning how to read and
    interpret the nutrition fact labels on foods and
    how to scale a recipe .
  • materials teacher will use
  • Resources collected during the past several years
  • Invite a nutritionist.
  • Planning backward is very helpful. The teacher
    can more clearly specify what knowledge and
    skills are really essential, given the goals for
    the unit.

17
  1. The assessmentsthe performance tasks and related
    sources of evidenceare designed prior to the
    lessons.
  2. Revised to better support the desired enduring
    understandings.
  3. The teaching methods and resource materials are
    chosen last, mindful of the work that students
    must produce to meet the standards. What
    instructional strategies will be most effective
    at helping us reach our targets
  4. The role of the textbook may shift from the
    primary resource to a supporting one.

18
The Big Picture of a Design Approach
Key Design Question
Design Considerations
Filters (Design Criteria)
What the Final Design Accomplishes
National standards. State standards. District
standards. Regional topic opportunities. Teacher
expertise and interest.
Stage 1. What is worthy and requiring of
understanding?
Enduring ideas. Opportunities for authentic,
discipline based work. Uncoverage. Engaging.
Unit framed around enduring understandings and
essential questions.
Unit anchored in credible and educationally vital
evidence of the desired understandings.
Stage 2. What is evidence of understanding?
Six facets of understanding. Continuum of
assessment types.
Valid. Reliable. Sufficient. Authentic work.
Feasible. Student Friendly.
Stage 3. What learning experiences and teaching
promote understanding, interest, and excellence?
Research-based repertoire of learning and
teaching strategies. Essential and enabling
knowledge and skill.
WHERE Where is it going? Hook the students.
Explore and equip. Rethink and revise. Exhibit
and evaluate.
Coherent learning experiences and teaching that
will evoke and develop the desired
understandings, promote interest, and make
excellent performance more likely.
19
What is a Matter of Understandingchapter 2
  • Any complex unit of study will involve many
    targets simultaneously knowledge, skills,
    attitudes, habits of mind, and understanding.
  • Clarify how the goal of understanding differs
    from other achievement targets, when teaching for
    understanding is needed, and how to select the
    important understandings to focus upon.

20
What Should be Uncovered?
  • The need to understand is heightened when an
    idea, fact, argument, or experience goes against
    our expectations or is counterintuitive.
  • A curriculum designed to develop understanding
    uncovers complex, abstract, and counterintuitive
    ideas by involving student in active questioning,
    practice trying out ideas.
  • Uncoverage describes the design philosophy of
    guided inquiry into abstract ideas.

21
The Expert-Novice Gap
  • The students needs to know uncoverage from their
    point of view not ours.
  • Educators/teachers must also know the subject
    well enough to get beyond inert textbook and
    curriculum framework language
  • Our designs must help the student see what is
    worth understanding, what needs further
    exploration and understanding from the activities
    and readings.
  • weaknesses conventional curriculum designs seems
    to be the in depth focus on a particular theme
    there is no enduring learning for the students
    to derive.

22
Re-Visiting the Vignettes
  • The world history teacher covers vast amounts of
    content during the last quarter of the year.
  • The teacher does not consider what the students
    will understand and apply from the material.
  • Even if the course students need to determine
    what is most important
  • Need to find out what kind of intellectual
    scaffolding is provided to guide students through
    important ideas.
  • In coverage oriented instruction, the teacher,
    in effect, merely checks off topics.

23
Critiques with the vignettes designs
  • The designs does not prioritize important ideas
    worthy of understanding.
  • The designs does not foster students
    understanding because it does not encourage them
    to explore essential questions.
  • Students have no clear performance targets. They
    do not know the purpose of activities and lessons
    or the expected performance requirements.
  • The necessary evidence of that understanding has
    occurred as not been established.
  • Without explicit performance goals or culminating
    assessments of understanding, teachers do not
    know which students understand what, and to what
    level of sophistication.
  • Ensure understanding by knowing what subject
    matter needs uncoverage to be understood and
    learned.

24
Focusing on Priorities
  • Not everything we ask students to learn must be
    thoroughly understood.
  • What knowledge is worth understandingworth
    spending time to uncover?
  • What kind of achievement target is understanding,
    and how does it differ from the other targets or
    standards?

25
What Knowledge is Worth Understanding?
  • .
  • Enduring.
  • At the heart of the discipline.
  • Needing uncoverage.
  • Potentially engaging.
  • We cannot go into depth on everything.

26
Filters for Selecting Understandings
  • Represent a big idea having enduring value
    beyond the classroom
  • Reside at the heart of the discipline (involving
    doing the subject.
  • Require uncoverage (of abstract or often
    misunderstood ideas).
  • Offer potential for engaging students.

Enduring understanding
27
Inadequancies
  • There is inadequacy of most district, state, and
    national standards in helping clarify which are
    the big ideas and how best to uncover them.
    Either too vague for example, The student will
    be proficient in all genres of writingor they
    unhelpfully suggest that didactic teaching and
    rote learning will be sufficient for learning
    The student will know that there are three
    branches of government and why.
  • Teacher- will need to amplify or sharpen the
    framing of the content standards into useful
    matters of understanding if they work in states
    or districts the provide less specific guidance.

28
What kind of Achievement Target is Understanding,
and How does it Differ from Other Targets or
Standards?
  • To understand a topic or subject is to use
    knowledge and skill in sophisticated, flexible
    ways.
  • Knowledge and skill necessary elements of
    understanding, but they are not synonymous with
    understanding.
  • Matters of understanding require more Students
    need to make conscious sense and apt use of the
    knowledge they are learning and the principles
    underlying it.
  • Knowing something implies knowing a set of
    facts, skills,and procedures that need only be
    internalized.

29
  • Understanding involves the abstract and
    conceptual, not merely the concrete and discrete
    concepts, generalizations, theories, and mental
    links between facts.
  • Understanding involves the ability to use
    knowledge and skill in context, as opposed to
    doing something routine and on cue in
    out-of-context assignments or assessment items.

30
What are Matters of Understanding an Any
Achievement Target?
  • Underneath many straightforward facts is often a
    complicated and arguable matter of understanding,
    with a history worth knowing
  • Important to ask What part of the fact might be
    embedded theory?

31
Problems for Understanding
  • Problems for understanding lurk beneath seemingly
    unproblematic knowledge.
  • Students continually must be led to recognize the
    need for uncoverage of knowledge and skill they
    learnthe need for active inquiry.
  • A key challenge in teaching for understanding is
    to make the students view of knowledge and
    coming-to-know more sophisticated by revealing
    the problems, controversies, and assumptions that
    lie behind much given and seemingly unproblematic
    knowledge.
  • Four criteria serve as filters to select ideas to
    teach for understanding.

32
Questions Doorways to Understanding
The questions often seemed to serve as criteria
for determining where students were getting and
how well they were understanding. Bruner, 1973,
pp 449 -450
  • One key design strategy is to build curriculum
    around the the questions that gave rise to the
    content knowledge in the first place, rather than
    simply teaching students.

33
  • Organizing the unit around questions such as
    these would provide teacher and students with a
    sharper focus and better direction for inquiry.
  • Questions call for students to make meaning of
    more carefully selected activities, and they call
    for teachers to devise assessment tasks related
    to answering them.
  • Questions render the unit design more coherent
    and make the students role more appropriately
    intellectual.
  • Turn content standards and outcome statements
    into question form, and then design assignments
    and assessments that evoke possible answers.

34
Student responses enable us to test our activity
and assignment designs to ensure that learning is
more than only engaging activity or
indiscriminate coverage.
35
Essential and Unit Questions
  • What types of questions might guide our teaching
    and engage students in uncovering the important
    ideas at the heart of each subject?
  • What is an important question for which the text
    book provides an answer?
  • These types of questions cannot be answered
    satisfactorily in a sentence.
  • Need to use provocative and multi-layered
    questions that reveal the richness and
    complexities of a subject.

36
  • Essential questions point to the key inquiries
    and the core ideas of a discipline.
  • Brunner (1996) suggests that questions of this
    type are ones that pose dilemmas, subvert
    obvious or canonical truths or force
    incongruities upon our attention.(p.127) --A
    recurring question that can be used to organize a
    unit, course, or entire program
  • Essential questions can and should be asked over
    and over.

37
Tips for Using Essential Questions
  • Make the content the answers to the questions.
  • Select or design assessment tasks, up front, that
    are explicitly linked to the questions.
  • Prioritize content for students to make the work
    clearly focus on a few key questions.
  • Edit the questions to make them as engaging and
    provocative as possible for the particular age
    group. Frame the questions in kid language as
    appropriate.
  • Derive and design specific concrete exploratory
    activities and inquiries for each question.
  • Post the overarching questions in the classroom,
    and encourage students to organize notebooks
    around them to emphasize their importance for
    study and note taking.
  • Help students personalize the questions.
    Encourage them to share examples, personal
    stories, and hunches, and to bring clippings and
    artifacts to class to help the questions com
    alive.
  • Allot sufficient time for unpacking the
    questions. Be mindful of student age, experience,
    and other instructional obligations. Use
    question-concept maps to show relatedness of
    questions.
  • Share your questions with other facult to make
    planning and teaching for cross-subject matter
    coherence more likely

38
Essential questions characterized by what they do
  • Go to the heart of a discipline.
  • Recur naturally throughout ones learning the
    field.
  • Answers become increasingly sophisticated.
  • Raise other important questions

39
  • The questions should be framed for maximal
    simplicity be worded in student-friendly
    language provoke discussion and questions and
    point toward the larger essential and unit
    questions.
  • Entry-point questions provide a focus for all the
    work and knowledge of mastery.
  • Example with nutrition unitthe question, what is
    healthy eating gets at the essence of what I want
    my students to take awaythe enduring
    understanding.
  • or What is wellness?

40
Putting It All Together A Design Template
Form and Function
The Understanding by Design template provides a
format in which all the design elements come
together to enable the designer and others to
take stock. The first page (Figure 11.1) asks
designers to consider what they want students to
understand and then to frame those understandings
in terms of questions. Users are prompted to
identify overarching understandings and essential
questions to establish a larger context into
which a particular unit is nested. What does it
mean to live a healthy life? and, What is
wellness
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